Reconfiguring EU Peripheries explores the diverse nature of the European Union’s interactions with its peripheries. With its focus on the perceptions of politicians, the volume casts new light on the motivations that underpin the political elites’ attitudes towards the EU in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Hungary, Kosovo, Moldova, Romania, Türkiye and Ukraine. By challenging the conventional understanding of contestation and peripherality, this volume is a first step towards looking at the EU and the peripheries it creates from an alternative, and sometimes ignored, point of view.
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